In addition to its smart design customized for its city's latitude, the structure will have gorgeous views of Jackson Park to the south and Chicago’s skyline to the north - which are sure to draw Chicagoans in even if they've never heard of solar shading before in their lives.

Solstice on the Park will have 26 stories and 145 apartments when it is complete. Each living space is chiseled to create a self-shaded south-facing surface to keep the sun out in the summer, reducing air conditioning costs and energy-usage. During the winter, the glass allows sun to enter the apartments for passive solar warming, decreasing the need for artificial heating.

The whole building is 550,000 sf and is divided into 145 dwellings, outdoor gardens, a party room, offices, conference spaces and a parking lot. In addition to its smart design customized for its city’s latitude, the structure will have gorgeous views of Jackson Park to the south and Chicago’s skyline to the north – which are sure to draw Chicagoans in even if they’ve never heard of solar shading before in their lives. “By making latitude into a visible feature for the façade and its reason-to-be, the project challenges the current notion of pure iconography and symbolism in tall buildings,” say Studio Gang on their website.

NEW USER

CURRENT USERS LOGIN

3 Comments

[...] of the panels by giving them a preferred orientation, and the glass will be able to reflect a dramatically larger percentage of summer sun, thus reducing cooling loads. By taking advantage of a generous renewable tax credit, [...]

RicciardoSeptember 30, 2010 at 4:22 pm

Whenever I read a post I cannot return to my original point of browsing!
I can only return to a particular post